Again, you may be the only person who has really understood the reason I started this thread - namely because I feel that the regulation in question is unsatisfactory (in relation to the issue we've been discussing) and really needs to be revised/improved.Although we realise that mirrors and showers etc do not fit into the zone conditions rules nicely I think that, for practical purposes we only decide to treat that object as a point of utilisation in a similar manner, almost no one will make them exceed 50mm deep or amoured/conduit ...
As I see it, with "the letter of the regulation" as it currently is,there are only two possibilities:
1... IF (despite the actual meaning of "a point") a large wall-mounted current-using item (like an illuminated mirror) is intended/'deemed' to qualify as "a point", with dimensions equal to those of the item (it surely is not an "accessory" or "switchgear",, then the current reg would create 'permitted zones' (for shallow-buried cables) that were so large as to defeat the (presumed) point of the regulation.
2... On the other hand, IF the item is not intended/deemed to qualify as "a point", then (unless some other electrical items create permitted zones) there in nowhere on the wall where one is permitted to bury 'unprotected' cables <50mm below the surface, meaning that any shallow-buried cables on that wall would have to have earthed metallic covering or be in metal conduit etc.
I would suggest that neither of those possibilities is satisfactory and, in the case of (2),as you say, I imagine that most people would simpoly ignore it, leaving it unclear to any third party as to where they might have buried cables.
That's my (1) above - and, as I say, it would mean that the reg served very little useful purpose, since it would leave a 'man with a drill' with little guidance as to where he/she could most safely penetrate the wall.My conclusion, it is a fudge that we must use to let the mirror/shower etc create the dimension of zone decision, ....
I've made my suggestion as to how the reg could be revised so as to be useful (based on centre point of visible object),but I doubt that will ever happen.... unless someone has a better idea that has a chance of universal acceptance.
Exactly.We have no idea where a backbox might be unless the mirror is merely hung up like a picture and from backbox to mirror is a length of flex in a void behind such mirror, if it is fixed in position we cant be expecting Joe Bloggs to lift the mirror away from the wall to take a peek.
See above. With the reg as it is, we are simply between the devil and the deep blue sea- a choice between a situation (per what you're saying) which would mean that the reg would achieve very little and a situation in which most people would probably ignore it - neither of which does much in terms of what one assumes to be the "raison d'etre" of the regulation!.... for a mirror on a wall, no such luck, the whole mirror needs to be treated like a point even if we declare the mirror etc not to actually be a point by definitions. What else can we reasonably do?
Kind Regards, John
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